Mike Moutray - St.Louis MO
Member
I almost forgot which end of the detector to hold! I haven't been out hunting since my trip to Massachusetts in October last year for Bob's hunt. Weather always didn't cooperate and I had too much other business that fell on my days off. a couple weeks ago I was laid up in bed for 6 days with a wicked chest cold that was so bad I ended up in the hospital - they didn't find anything seriously wrong, but they didn't like the way my EKG looked and they think my heart may be getting more problems that I supposedly fought off years ago. I have to wear a monitor for a month while they sort out what, if anything , is wrong. That kind of put me down in the dumps with the prospect of having to go back in for a 5th heart procedure
Anyway, the weather was looking stormy this weekend, but when it cleared up I found myself in the basement digging out the detector and charging up the batteries for a trip out Sunday morning. I decided to put in some time with the 15X12 SEF coil today. I brought my 4 year old boy with me to get him some sun and fresh air.
I went to my old haunt - my favorite city park that pretty much has been beat to death by every Explorer user in the bi-state area, but I had a goal to go and pound a couple old spots to get a seated coin. I jumped out ready and rarin' to go but 5 minutes into hunting my son was in tears because the wind was like 30+ miles an hour and he was having NO fun whatsoever. I reluctantly went back to the van and got him inside out of the wind. I went to drive to the museum to let him run loose when I passed a spot that had always produced well for me in the past and I got a "feeling". I parked and told the kid to watch me out the window. I went over and started sweeping. This spot was in an old picnic area and produced many seated dimes over the years. About 10 minutes in I get a solid deep silver hit that broke up pretty bad and nulled out when swept from different directions. It was right in a spot that I had dug 4-5 seated dimes out of nails in the past, so I thought this signal warranted a dig. It was in a shallow depression where a tree had been cut out years ago, so I thought it might be a clad coin that ended up deep down after the tree was removed. Sure enough, after pulling up a deep plug, the probe sang out over a deep coin! I read right at penny - where most seated dimes hit - and when I broke open a clump of dirt from the bottom of the hole I saw that wonderful sight of silver... 1876S Seated Dime!!!
Man I really NEEDED that one! That chased away all the cabin fever and worries immediately! I dug out a giant nail an inch away from where the dime lay in the ground. The SEF saw that signal even with the nail in the way!
[attachment 119757 08mar09seated.JPG]
A couple minutes later the sky opened up and dumped rain all over me, so I went back and took the kid to the museum and turned him loose for a few hours. When we left, it was sunny and beautiful outside and he immediately fell asleep in the van so I decided to let him sleep while I hunted some more in a different spot where I'd be close by to him. This spot had been absolutely nailed to death in the last year by explorer users with several seated coins being found. I figured I'd see if the winter freeze turned over any signals. I spent an hour and a half in astonishment as I got one signal after another to dig. You couldn't buy a signal out here last fall now they are everywhere. I added a dateless Shield Nickel, 1900 V Nickel, a wheatie, streetcar token from Danville, IL., a really nice Bell's Pine Tar Honey fob, a neat gold-filled cuff link, a gold filled button with a silver dogs head inside the glass top, a mangled hunk of sterling silver that looks like eyeglass frames, a Hutchison bottle stopper still inside the broken blob top. Last but not least the final signal I dug was a shocker! I got a signal that LOCKED on half dollar no matter which way I swung and it was deep! I couldn't believe that this signal was here - right where dozens of explorers had been many times. I cut a plug and the the probe howled half dollar down deep! I think I was drooling all over myself but I can't remember... I was too busy imagining a seated half coming out of the ground. I finally reached the target 10 inches down and pulled a big dark disc out of the hole. It turned out to be an 1830 Large Cent! That made a good end to a great day of detecting!
[attachment 119758 08mar09finds.JPG]
I didn't include the 30 or so bullets and junk targets that I also dug... the ground conditions were perfect and the signals were popping everywhere.
That is some nice finds for the first trip of the year, especially when I wait til March to take it. I need to get out more often... especially if I can still strangle these kind of finds out of the used up parks. Take care and HH, Mike.
I went to my old haunt - my favorite city park that pretty much has been beat to death by every Explorer user in the bi-state area, but I had a goal to go and pound a couple old spots to get a seated coin. I jumped out ready and rarin' to go but 5 minutes into hunting my son was in tears because the wind was like 30+ miles an hour and he was having NO fun whatsoever. I reluctantly went back to the van and got him inside out of the wind. I went to drive to the museum to let him run loose when I passed a spot that had always produced well for me in the past and I got a "feeling". I parked and told the kid to watch me out the window. I went over and started sweeping. This spot was in an old picnic area and produced many seated dimes over the years. About 10 minutes in I get a solid deep silver hit that broke up pretty bad and nulled out when swept from different directions. It was right in a spot that I had dug 4-5 seated dimes out of nails in the past, so I thought this signal warranted a dig. It was in a shallow depression where a tree had been cut out years ago, so I thought it might be a clad coin that ended up deep down after the tree was removed. Sure enough, after pulling up a deep plug, the probe sang out over a deep coin! I read right at penny - where most seated dimes hit - and when I broke open a clump of dirt from the bottom of the hole I saw that wonderful sight of silver... 1876S Seated Dime!!!

[attachment 119757 08mar09seated.JPG]
A couple minutes later the sky opened up and dumped rain all over me, so I went back and took the kid to the museum and turned him loose for a few hours. When we left, it was sunny and beautiful outside and he immediately fell asleep in the van so I decided to let him sleep while I hunted some more in a different spot where I'd be close by to him. This spot had been absolutely nailed to death in the last year by explorer users with several seated coins being found. I figured I'd see if the winter freeze turned over any signals. I spent an hour and a half in astonishment as I got one signal after another to dig. You couldn't buy a signal out here last fall now they are everywhere. I added a dateless Shield Nickel, 1900 V Nickel, a wheatie, streetcar token from Danville, IL., a really nice Bell's Pine Tar Honey fob, a neat gold-filled cuff link, a gold filled button with a silver dogs head inside the glass top, a mangled hunk of sterling silver that looks like eyeglass frames, a Hutchison bottle stopper still inside the broken blob top. Last but not least the final signal I dug was a shocker! I got a signal that LOCKED on half dollar no matter which way I swung and it was deep! I couldn't believe that this signal was here - right where dozens of explorers had been many times. I cut a plug and the the probe howled half dollar down deep! I think I was drooling all over myself but I can't remember... I was too busy imagining a seated half coming out of the ground. I finally reached the target 10 inches down and pulled a big dark disc out of the hole. It turned out to be an 1830 Large Cent! That made a good end to a great day of detecting!
[attachment 119758 08mar09finds.JPG]
I didn't include the 30 or so bullets and junk targets that I also dug... the ground conditions were perfect and the signals were popping everywhere.
That is some nice finds for the first trip of the year, especially when I wait til March to take it. I need to get out more often... especially if I can still strangle these kind of finds out of the used up parks. Take care and HH, Mike.